Ann Harding. Laurence Oliver, who starred with her in Westward Passage (1932), referred to her as an "angel." Director Henry Hathaway, who directed her and Gary Cooper in Peter Ibbetson (1935), claimed she was a "bitch." Critics hailed her as the finest actress to venture from Broadway to Hollywood. The Ann Harding story follows her from humble beginnings as the daughter of a career army office who moved around constantly, to her youth settling in New York. After spending a year attending Bryn Mawr college, she found work as a clerk and freelance script reader with a film company. Then, she made her stage debut in 1921, and eight years later, she made her film debut in an early talkie, Paris Bound, opposite Fredric March. She was the Gallant Lady (1933), an unwed mother, who gives up baby for adoption and hopes to get it back when the adoptive mother dies. Her unique, natural screen presence in Holiday (1930) earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. From 1929-1936, she reigned as cinema's "Gallant Lady." Her co-stars included Ronald Coleman, Mary Astor, Conrad Nagel, Leslie Howard, Melvyn Douglas, Richard Dix, and William Powell, among many others. Ann's ethereal quality belied a passionate nature. Her affairs with three remarkably talented and very married men associated with the film industry could have easily outraged fans and quashed her career. Theater visionary-director Jasper Deeter, Ann's life-long mentor, remarked that Ann was a master at hiding her childish, stubborn temperament. Friends of Ann's daughter, Jane Otto, claim that despite Ann's highly publicized custody battles, she was a detached mother. In the 1950s and 1960s, she appeared extensively on American television in series such as The Defenders (1961), Dr. Kildare (1961), Ben Casey (1961), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1961), and Burke’s Law (1963). Scott O’Brien’s richly researched and illustrated biography draws heavily from Ann’s family, friends, and personal papers. The book includes behind-the-scenes anecdotes, contemporary reviews, and synopses of Ann’s films. He pays tribute to her career and unveils a complex portrait of one of stage and cinema’s most remarkable talents.
The book includes behind-the-scenes anecdotes, contemporary reviews, and synopses of Ann's films, and pays tribute to her career, unveiling a complex portrait of one of stage and cinema's most remarkable talents.
207 Nothing But the Tooth 117 Nothing But the Truth 12, 16, 127 Nothing But Trouble 34 Nothing Sacred 92 Notorious 42, 193,229 A Notorious Affair 193 A Notorious Gentleman 29, 30, 73 The Notorious Landlady 17, 242 The Notorious Mrs.
The “endlessly fascinating” true story of a custody battle that threatened to expose the seedy secrets of Hollywood’s Golden Age—illustrated with photos (Entertainment Weekly).
Ann Harding-Cinema's Gallant Lady. Albany, GA: BearManor Media, 2010. Plant, Rebecca Jo. Mom: The Transformation of Motherhood in Modern America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010.
Begun as an audacious experiment, for thirty years the Hedgerow Theatre prospered as America's most successful repertory company.
Compiled from the author s own enormous collection and years of research, this book lists approximately 6,200 films and the music that was a part of them. Each entry gives...
Focusing on nine of these women and presenting shorter glimpses of nine others, this book tells their captivating personal stories and examines their professional achievements.
“Susan Glaspell ́s Trifles (1916): Women ́s Conspiracy of Silence Beyond the Melodrama of Beset Womanhood. ... Macomb: Western Illinois University Press. O ́Brien, Scott 2010. Ann Harding. Cinema ́s Gallant Lady. Albany, Georgia:
This book showcases a range of contemporary French actresses to an audience that will know how to appreciate them—an American public hungry for the exact qualities that these women represent.
In these pages you will find biographical information as well as a look at every Deanna Durbin movie.